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THE POWER OF COLOR Visual Elements Color.

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Presentation on theme: "THE POWER OF COLOR Visual Elements Color."— Presentation transcript:

1 THE POWER OF COLOR Visual Elements Color

2 Visual Elements 2. Color the element of art derived from reflected light has the strongest effect on our emotions creates the mood or atmosphere of an artwork 3 qualities: hue, value, and intensity

3 Hue a particular wavelength of spectral color to which we give a name
colors of the spectrum a color as it is named in the color wheel

4 The color wheel shown here is based on twelve pure hues and can be divided into primary, secondary, and intermediate hues or colors. Primary colors – red, yellow, and blue cannot be produced by an intermixing of other colors Secondary colors – orange, green, and violet resulted from the mixture of two primaries Intermediate colors – red-orange, yellow-orange, yellow-green, blue-green, blue-violet, and red violet are formed by combining a primary color and a secondary color

5 Warm colors and cool colors
The difference between warm and cool colors may come chiefly from associations.

6 Warm colors - vivid and energetic
- appear to expand and advance Cool colors - give a soothing and calm impression - appear to contract and recede

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9 Value relative lightness or darkness of a hue
changes through additions of white and black lighter version (+white) – tint darker version (+black)- shade

10 Blue in a range of values.
Shade Tint Range of values from black to white

11 Intensity relative purity of a color
refers to the brightness (high) or dullness (low) of a hue also called chroma or saturation

12 Red in a range of intensities.
Adding white/black/gray or another color to a pure hue reduces intensity. Red in a range of intensities. High Low Gray

13 Mixture of different colors appear duller and darker since pigments absorb more and more light.
Subtractive color mixture

14 Combination of the light primaries (red-orange, green, blue-violet) produces lighter colors.
Additive color mixture

15 Tonality refers to the overall effect of a work of art when one color and variations of it seem to dominate the whole also referred to as color scheme, which are color groupings that provide distinct color harmonies

16 Color Schemes/Color Harmonies 1. Monochromatic
composed of variations of the same hue pure hue is mixed with black and/or white

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22 Color Schemes/Color Harmonies 2. Complementary
involves colors directly opposite each other on the color wheel Complementary colors -Side by side: contrast strongly and intensify each other -Mixed: form neutral grays

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27 Color Schemes/Color Harmonies 3. Analogous
combines colors next to each other on the color wheel

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29 Symphony in Grey and Green (c. 1866-72). James Whistler.

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32 Color Schemes/Color Harmonies 4. Triadic
composed of any three colors equidistant from each other on the color wheel

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35 Optical Effects of Color
Afterimage - an image which persists or remains in negative after the original stimulation has ended - results from the excitation and subsequent fatigue of the retina due to prolonged exposure to a visual form

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38 Optical Effects of Color
Pointillism – dots (points) of pure color are placed next to each other -attributed to Georges Seurat - color sensations from small patches of different pure colors placed close together forming a new color

39 A Sunday on La Grand Jatte (1884-86). Georges Seurat.

40 Detail from A Sunday on La Grand Jatte (1884-86). Georges Seurat.

41 Lucas ( ). Chuck Close.

42 Lucas ( ). Chuck Close. Detail.


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